WHY YOUR CHILD WON'T LISTEN
AND WHAT ACTUALLY WORKS
Here's something I hear from parents all the time:
"I tell them what to do. I explain it clearly. They just don't listen."
And I understand the frustration. But here's what the research and years of working with families tells me:
You don't have a listening problem. You have a connection problem.
And that's actually good news.
Because connection is something you can build, starting today.
YOU CAN’T HAVE INFLUENCE WITHOUT CONNECTION
Think about a person in your life who you truly listened to.
Someone whose opinion actually influenced how you thought or behaved.
That person likely made you feel heard, respected and safe.
It's the same for children.
When the relationship with our children feels challenging, we can find ourselves in a loop of just giving instructions, correcting and complaining to them. This creates feelings of distance and disconnection, and our children become stressed, less cooperative and stop listening.
Children are not usually deliberately being difficult, but they may be feeling unheard, disrespected, and unsafe themselves.
START BUILDING HEALTHY CONNECTIONS TODAY
You can start building a healthy connection today with one simple step.
BEING TOGETHER
With busy family lives now being the norm, and digital distractions separating us all, we are creating a real sense of loneliness in children and young people.
We can be in the same room as our children and still not really be with them.
One of the simplest and most powerful things you can do is to be with your child for 20 minutes every single day
It may need to be done on the phone or via FaceTime if you won’t see them, and you may feel that's too much time if you have several children, but make it work for you, no excuses.
That means 20 minutes just being together, to step into your child’s world, doing what they want.
No commands
No directions
No teaching
No correcting
I know it sounds quite a long time for some, or almost too simple. But I've seen it transform the most challenging situations.
Children who preferred one parent over the other, and teenagers who had completely shut down. Twenty minutes a day, done consistently, is like putting money in the relational bank.
FOR EXAMPLE
My daughter started school at 4 years and 2 months old. (Yes, far too young looking back)
When she came home, she was exhausted, hungry, desperate to see her baby brother and me, and absolutely bursting to let off some steam; she would literally jump on the back of the sofa.
So I used that time intentionally.
Some quality time together, some food, some rest, some unwinding.
It worked a treat.
She felt grounded again, and the transition back home became so much smoother.
Think about when your child might benefit most from that extra time with you. It might be after school, before school, when they look stressed, or when you see a pattern of challenging behaviour occurring.
Those moments matter more than we realise.
And if you're stuck for ideas, try creating a Special Time box together, fill it with simple games and activities your child chooses themselves. Keep it just for your special time together, and it gives them choices and something to look forward to every day and builds your connection.
You may even just watch a favourite TV programme, just as long as it’s about them, doing what they want, and you are interested and encouraging.
I've worked with countless families over the years where children have stopped listening, and parents feel like they've lost their connection.
And the ones who see the biggest shift aren't always the ones who make the biggest changes.
They're the ones who build healthy connections and simply decide to show up — consistently, warmly, and with their full attention.
When children feel heard, respected and safe, they listen. Not because they have to. Because they want to.
That's available to every parent, and you can start today.
If you would like support navigating parenting and creating healthy connections, reach out for support today.